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InternetNews February 2, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
Advertisers Catch Super Bowl Virus Viral advertising could pay big in the end, but at what cost to the brand? |
InternetNews January 29, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Super Bowl 09: Social Media Hits the Gridiron Twitter, YouTube, Facebook - round up the usual suspects! Super Sunday is going to be a Web 2.0 extravaganza. |
Knowledge@Wharton January 15, 2003 |
The Super Bowl's Super-expensive Advertising: Does It Work? For the advertising industry and millions of television viewers, the upcoming Super Bowl broadcast, scheduled for Jan. 26 in San Diego, will be a string of entertaining commercials interrupted from time to time by a football game. But do the ads succeed as advertisements? |
Search Engine Watch February 1, 2008 Peter Hershberg |
Super Bowl Advertiser Search Trends For this year's big game, the winning advertisers will understand search and social media. |
InternetNews February 3, 2005 Tim Gray |
Back For More Super Bowl Fun: Dot-Com Ads Marketers disagree over whether a big ad spend during the Super Bowl is effective. |
BusinessWeek January 15, 2007 Jon Fine |
TV's Last Man Standing Why the Super Bowl is still the biggest game in town for advertisers. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 29, 2014 Michael Blanding |
Super Bowl Ads for Multitaskers Harvard Business School professor Thales S. Teixeira explains how advertisers can step up their game to capture viewer attention of many viewers who are also using smartphones and laptops. |
CRM April 2013 Judith Aquino |
A First Look at Second Screens As media consumption becomes more fragmented, marketers consider syncing television and mobile content. |
AskMen.com Steve Seepersaud |
Super Bowl Big Spenders Who the big Super Bowl advertisers are, how much they're spending in 2006, and what types of advertising they purchased -- at $80,000 per second! |
InternetNews January 30, 2009 Judy Mottl |
Dotcoms Line Up for Super Bowl Payoff Net companies weave broadcast and Web marketing in hopes of touchdown results. |
InternetNews February 3, 2006 David Miller |
Super Bowl Ads Just Won't Let Go Companies are betting big that viewers will also visit their special Super Bowl advertising Web sites and enthusiastically download ads onto their iPods and cell phones. |
The Motley Fool February 8, 2010 Anders Bylund |
Google Scores Big at the Super Bowl Google throws its hat in the traditional-marketing ring. Was this Super Bowl ad a touchdown or a fumble? |
Search Engine Watch February 8, 2006 Chris Sherman |
Super Bowl Search Marketing Scorecard While much attention was focused on the television ads aired during the super bowl, the real winners were those firms who combined traditional media with savvy search marketing campaigns. |
InternetNews December 26, 2003 Janis Mara |
Disregard Downturn -- Dotcom Super Bowl Ads Live At least a couple of online entities are still investing in high-ticket Super Bowl ads. |
InternetNews February 6, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
Web Crowns Super Bowl Ad Winners, Losers User-generated Doritos spot takes top honors all around, nets creators $1 million. |
The Motley Fool February 7, 2007 Alyce Lomax |
Quick Take: Garmin's Super Bowl Loss? Was the Garmin ad really so bad? Maybe the experts made the wrong call on this one. It does make one wonder if the company's overall campaign is going to have more power to bring brand recognition to Garmin than some might imagine. |
InternetNews February 2, 2006 Susan Kuchinskas |
MSN's Motor City Connection MSN is showcasing Windows Live Local with a special Super Bowl mash-up combining mapping with information on local attractions in Detroit. |
Search Engine Watch February 6, 2007 Chris Boggs |
Super Bowl SEO: Who Had the Best Organic Gameplan? A look at Super Bowl advertisers' search engine optimization efforts for terms related to their TV campaign. |
InternetNews February 9, 2010 |
How Did Super Bowl Advertisers Follow Up Online? Gomez, a specialist in Web performance, examines which of the companies that shelled out for Super Bowl spots did the best job keeping their sites hopping after the big game. |
InternetNews February 1, 2008 Kenneth Corbin |
Who Says Geeks Don't Like Football? It's not just about beer and cars. As the Super Bowl approaches, tech companies have worked out their own advertising game plans. |
The Motley Fool January 29, 2007 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Thanks for the Ads, Super Bowl XLI So who will win the big game? With 45.9 million homes tuning in to last year's game, is it any wonder whom the free-spending advertisers are rooting for? |
The Motley Fool January 30, 2008 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
E*Trade Wants to Be Super on Sunday E*Trade is back on the ad warpath, paying as much as $6 million for a pair of ads that will appear in the Super Bowl. |
InternetNews January 26, 2004 Janis Mara |
AOL, CBS Team For Vintage Super Bowl Ads Cross-media promo amplifies message on both channels. |
InternetNews February 6, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
Super Bowl Ad Winners And Losers Spending a couple million dollars doesn't guarantee commercial success. |
AskMen.com January 24, 2001 Mark Simmons |
Super Bowl Flop? Isn't it fascinating to see media companies fighting a war of words through the media? Of course it is, and that is why the recent mini-feud between CBS and The Wall Street Journal, over ad sales for the Super Bowl, was so much fun... |
CRM April 1, 2006 Alexandra DeFelice |
Super Bowl Marketing Fumbles More than 90 million people watched this year's Super Bowl, many of them caring more about the commercials than the game itself. But if the ads weren't memorable or if they offended potential customers, that's $2.5 million per ad down the drain. |
The Motley Fool December 24, 2008 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Super Bowl Playbook: FedEx Passes With FedEx scaling back on payroll and even on its 401(k) matching contributions, the company didn't feel it prudent to fork over as much as $3 million for a Super Bowl ad. |
Search Engine Watch April 4, 2006 Amy Edelstein |
Putting Search in the Ad Mix Search advertising used to be an afterthought, but now it has become a fundamental part of the overall advertising strategy of most major brands. |
HBS Working Knowledge January 29, 2013 Kim Girard |
Creating the Perfect Super Bowl Ad Professor Thales S. Teixeira says ad viewers lose purchasing interest when TV ads get too caught up in entertainment. His advice for the perfect pitch: tie together a good story and a compelling brand. |
The Motley Fool November 29, 2004 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
It's All About the 'O' An edgy ad campaign and a growth rate that trumps its online rivals has Overstock dealing with the welcome problem of too much demand. |
PC World January 24, 2003 Frank Thorsberg |
Super Bowl Goes Digital Fan polls, contests, trivia games, and more expand the NFL championship far beyond a single screen. |
InternetNews June 22, 2009 Michelle Megna |
Yahoo, Google Rev Up New Ad Products Search companies roll out new advertising platforms as the online ad industry malaise continues. |
Popular Mechanics February 21, 2008 Glenn Derene |
How Google's Ad Power Forced Microsoft to Bid on Yahoo! How Google's targeted advertising works as it expands to video, online cloud computing and mobile software -- ready to follow you everywhere, and to force Microsoft into a desperate takeover move. |
BusinessWeek June 11, 2009 Robert D. Hof |
Google's Grab for the Display Ad Market Google aims to unseat Yahoo and Microsoft with new, ultratargeted banner ads. Will Web publishers and online ad agencies bite? |
The Motley Fool November 27, 2006 Anders Bylund |
Your Super Bowl, Your Ads The Internet has opened up new avenues between corporations and consumers, and the recent rise of user-submitted video services like MySpace, YouTube, and Google Video is changing the rules of the game. Grassroots marketing seems to be an idea whose time has come. |
InternetNews December 28, 2006 Nicholas Carlson |
Where Commercials Go to Die What's Next in Tech: Who will pay for video content in 2007 and beyond? |
The Motley Fool February 7, 2008 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Baby Steps at E*Trade E*Trade's Superbowl talking baby ads may be the best investment the brokerage company has ever made. |
AskMen.com Dave Golokhov |
Super Bowl Events The average Super Bowl party host will dish out $118.80 this year, which includes food, drinks and all sorts of other knickknacks. |
AskMen.com Steve Seepersaud |
Top 10: Highest-Rated Broadcasts Let's recap the 10 most-watched sports-related broadcasts of all time. No big shocker here -- the Super Bowl dominates. |
InternetNews June 3, 2010 |
Google Snags Invite Media in Display Ad Bid Google continues its aggressive rate of acquisitions, this time snapping up Invite Media, a firm specializing in real-time bidding technology for selling display ads. |
Registered Rep. March 1, 2008 |
The Baby Boomer's Inner 800-Pound Gorilla AXA's Super Bowl ads. |
InternetNews February 2, 2009 Christopher Saunders |
Forget the Super Bowl. Who Won the Twitter Bowl? How did this year's multimillion-dollar ads fare with the Web 2.0 crowd? |
CRM May 2012 Judith Aquino |
Marketing and Advertising Agencies Blur the Lines Third-party partners are broadening their roles. What to consider for the perfect pairing. |
BusinessWeek April 24, 2006 Jon Fine |
Rise Of The Lowly Search Ad Savvy big-name marketers are now tying search ads into more traditional campaigns |
The Motley Fool January 18, 2007 Steven Mallas |
Nielsen Now Rates TV Ads Adjusting to the digital age, new ratings will track commercials' popularity. Whatever occurs, a better system to collect viewer data should eventually benefit advertisers and networks alike. |
The Motley Fool February 2, 2005 Nathan Slaughter |
Souping Up for the Super Bowl What to expect from this year's Super Bowl advertisers, where the real contest will be waged. |
InternetNews December 8, 2009 |
Bartz: Yahoo's Rivals Aren't Google and Microsoft Yahoo chief says company's biggest challenge is bringing offline ad dollars onto the Web. |
InternetNews February 6, 2004 Janis Mara |
Super Bowl Ads Supercharge Online Traffic Ads about sex, drugs and taxes sent Web traffic skyrocketing. |
BusinessWeek February 19, 2007 Jon Fine |
What Makes 'Citizen Ads' Work The arguments for citizen ads encompass every current marketing cliche. |
Wired February 2000 Warren Berger |
Hot Spots! The dot-coms rule this year's $125 million Super Bowl Sunday, targeting up to 400 percent of revenues for 30-second chunks of network air. What a deal, right? |